David Langton was born
Basil Muir Langton-Dodds to a middle-class family in
Motherwell,
Scotland in 1912. His father was a
wine merchant. Langton's family moved to England when he was four years old. He attended a
prep school in
Bath,
Somerset, and left education at the age of 16. Langton's father had always encouraged him to go into acting and got him his first job touring with a small
Shakespearean company. At 19 years old, Langton left the theatre and went to live on
Yell, a remote island in Shetland, and became a
sheep farmer while attempting to become a writer. However, he later admitted this was a "disaster", and when he went back to the mainland when his mother was ill, he realised he did not want to return. In 1938, Langton returned to working full-time in theatre. It was at this time that he changed his name to David Langton, as there was already an actor called Basil Langton, and his legal name was David Muir Langton. However, in 1939 the
war broke out and Langton soon enlisted. He first served in the
Royal Artillery ending up a
sergeant and was later commissioned in the
Northumberland Hussars and ended up a major. Langton served in France, Germany and
Belgium. He married his first wife, Rosemary, in 1940. When the war ended, they realised that the marriage had been a mistake, but stayed together for the sake of their three sons, Simon, Andrew and Robin. The eldest,
Simon, a director, would later work with his father on the set of
Upstairs, Downstairs. Langton and his first wife divorced in 1966. ==After the war==